by Jan Burke
He seemed taken aback, but then smiled and said, “A compromise. If I can’t find the negatives by Monday morning, you hand these over.”
“You search diligently before then?”
“Absolutely—if they’re worth the search.”
I handed him the envelope. “No worries on that score.”
He opened it, pulled out the photos, and after a surprised look crossed his face, took out his notebook and said, “Who took them?”
“Harold Richmond.”
“The guy with one idea?”
I felt the parts of my face that weren’t purple turn red. I explained who Richmond was, told him who had hired him. “I think you’ll find that he matches the description of the man who was trying to break into Briana’s apartment. The neighbors would probably be thrilled to pick him out of a lineup.”
While McCain continued to study the photos, I wrote down Richmond’s address and phone number, and told him how to get to Margot’s place on Rivo Alto. “You’re more likely to find him there,” I said, “or at a bar called the Wharf.”
As I said this last to him, an idea struck me. Fortunately, he was absorbed in studying the photos, so he didn’t see the little light bulb go on over my head.
“Because there’s a connection between your case and the bombing of the camper,” I said, “I think the Las Piernas Police are also going to want these negatives. So promise me you’ll share them with your good friend Reed Collins.”
He looked up then, and said, “You think this man killed your aunt?”
“I’m not saying he did or he didn’t. But he was taking her photo in the very place where she was killed.”
“And other places as well.”
I didn’t trust myself to speak. You re angry.
“If someone you loved had been photographed at her husband’s funeral, all for the entertainment of her spouse’s enemies, wouldn’t you be a little pissed off?”
“Yeah,” he admitted softly. “Yeah, I would.”
“One other thing. DeMont owns a Camry that was in a wreck a few weeks ago.”
His brows went up.
“I can give you the address of the body shop it’s in, if you don’t think it’s too late to find evidence on it.”
“We’ll probably find what we’re looking for. They may not have started working on it—a reputable shop will report anything that has signs of being in a pedestrian versus vehicle accident.”
“But it wasn’t in the shop until this week.” I explained the situation. “He might have cleaned it up before his sister hauled it off to the shop.”
“Don’t worry, if you’ve got the right car, we’ll know it.” He paused, then said, “You’re a reporter—got a strong enough stomach for some details?”
I nodded, not sure that was true.
“Blood, hair and other matter will still show up on a car that’s been washed—on the undercarriage, behind the grill and in other places most people wouldn’t think of cleaning. As for the time that’s passed, sure, we’d like to find any evidence as soon as possible, but even if the blood, fiber and other evidence have been destroyed, the LAPD collected parts of that car from the scene. We’ve got pieces to match up to the damage, and autopsy observations that will help do the same. And of course, there are the tires.”
“The tires?”
“There were tire-tread marks visible on the body.”
“Oh.”
“I don’t tell you this to distress you,” he said. “Just to let you know that I think we’ll have plenty of ways to link the car to the crime if it’s the one that was used to kill your aunt. He could have taken it through a car wash, and we’d still be able to show a jury that it’s the one.”
He reluctantly handed the photos back, then said, “You know these weren’t taken on the day she was killed?”
“Wrong sweater.”
He smiled. “You talked to Mr. Reyes.” He put on his jacket and tucked his notebook away. He studied me for a moment, then said, “You must get along well with Rachel.”
“If I could have chosen my own sister, I would have picked Rachel. You should see who I got instead.”
He laughed and said, “Thanks for the help. I need to get going on all of this.” He looked around, then said, “You think you and your cousin will be safe out here?”
“Does this mean I’m no longer a suspect?”
“Whoever said you were one?”
I groaned. “Maybe a long talk with Richmond will make you a little less suspicious of me.”
“One can always hope,” he said, smiling to himself as he walked toward his car.
I put the envelope on the small table in the van, then went back out to get the chairs. When I returned, Travis was standing next to the table, his hair sleep-tousled, a look of bewilderment on his face.
“Where are we?”
“A park on the east side of Las Piernas.” I picked up the envelope and explained why we had left Mary’s. “We tried to wake you, but the pain pill made that impossible.”
“I vaguely remember walking out to the van,” he said, rubbing his face, seeming still half-asleep. “How can you be so sure they knew where we were?”
That led to an explanation about my afternoon, and the photos.
“The photos are in that envelope?”
“Yes.”
“You said he took photos of my mother?”
“Yes.”
“May I seem them?” He said it with a touch of impatience.
Reluctantly, I handed them to him. I stepped outside to take the awning down.
He was silent as he looked through them, but despite visible efforts to control himself, he couldn’t hide his grief when he came to one of them. He hadn’t looked through all of them, but he set them down, then covered his eyes with his left hand. I stepped inside, finished with the awning, but leaving the door open. On the table, at the top of the stack, was one of the photos of his mother at Arthur’s funeral.
He broke down, but this storm was over almost as quickly as it started, as if he only needed its release for it to pass.
I found a box of tissues, and he took it, saying, “I’m sorry, I’m sorry. It’s just—God! I should have been there! I should have taken care of her, protected her!”
“Do you think you could have prevented Richmond from spying on her?”
After a moment he shook his head. “I couldn’t even prevent him from spying on you and me.”
He stepped outside, looked around. “Can we stay here overnight?”
“No. But we should keep moving, anyway.”
He glanced back at the envelope.
“Do you think Robert DeMont killed my mother?”
“If he did, McCain will find out from the car.”
He was quiet for a moment, then said, “But you don’t think he did it.” I m not sure.
“Why not?”
“These photos were most likely taken because someone believes your father murdered his first wife.”
“Harold Richmond and Robert DeMont both believe that,” he said.
“Well, Richmond does anyway.” I told him about DeMont’s history with knives. “But the more I think about it, the more I wonder why Robert would have killed Gwen. He might have tried to get her to divorce your dad, so that he could go back to raiding her money. But if she was dead and he couldn’t pin the murder on your dad, he was out of luck.”
“Maybe he found out about us—my mom and me,” Travis said. “Maybe he did hope to frame my dad, thought the bigamy would convince a jury that my dad was a murderer. Then the other DeMonts would get everything—my dad couldn’t inherit.”
“Hmm. But that was all settled a long time ago, whether they like it or not. Why hire someone to take photos of you and your mother now? Why attack you, your mother, Ulkins? They won’t get anything from the estate by killing you.”
“Who would?”
“Your uncle Gerald.”
“But he said he can’t inherit—”
/> “Gerald only said he couldn’t get anything from the DeMont estate. There could be money that didn’t come from her inheritance, and which would be fair game for Gerald. We need to talk to your friend Mr. Brennan to find out if there ever was a prenuptial agreement. I was hoping I could get you to call him again, ask his answering service to tell him that we want to drive out to—where does he stay?”
“Lake Arrowhead.”
“So tell him we’ll come up to Lake Arrowhead to talk to him.”
He made the call. When he hung up, he said, “I know that Gerald lied to me, but think about the things that have happened! This Richmond guy takes photos of my mom in an intersection, and she’s killed there! He takes these photos of my camper, and it blows up! What more do you need? I’m not saying I know why Richmond and Robert DeMont are trying to destroy us—hell, maybe they think of this as revenge. But Gerald couldn’t know you were going to find me that day, or even know where you live.”
“You’re right about Richmond and his photos, but I’m not so sure what you just said about Gerald is true.”
“What do you mean?”
“Something occurred to me while I was talking to McCain, telling him where he could count on finding Richmond. Earlier today, I had been asking myself some of those same questions—how could Gerald know where Richmond was going, and when he’d be there? Richmond might not have noticed that he had a tail on him, but Gerald wouldn’t be able to follow him around night and day. He works. And Deeny works, too. But I had forgotten a couple of pieces of information—failed to put them together until I was talking to McCain.”
I flipped to the page of my notebook that had the numbers from Margot’s caller-ID display written on it, and, next to them, the information Jerry Chase had looked up for me on the News-Express computers.
“I want to test a theory,” I said. I dialed the phone number. The number hadn’t answered the last time I called it—from the pay phone near Rivo Alto. I had called after closing time that night.
Travis looked on, puzzled.
“I’m calling a bar in Los Alamitos,” I said. “One that Harold Richmond frequents on a regular basis.”
After three rings, a gruff voice answered, “Wharf.”
“Hi,” I said. “Is Deeny there?”
Travis’s eyes widened.
“Naw, she won’t be in until five,” the voice answered, “but she’ll be working—no personal calls. Call her at home, all right?” He promptly hung up on me.
I repeated the conversation to Travis.
“So Richmond gets drunk at this bar and brags about his progress in the case,” Travis said. “And she goes home and tells Gerald.”
“Right.”
“Wouldn’t Richmond make the connection?”
“Not unless he sees her with Gerald; if she drives herself to and from work, probably not. And how many men in a bar ever learn a cocktail waitress’s last name?”
“I see your point. How did you know she worked there?”
“Our informant in the trailer park told us she was a cocktail waitress.”
“Trudy Flauson! Yes, now I remember.”
“Richmond the braggart,” I said. “Not hard to imagine him telling her about his obsession, especially when there’s some exciting news: Arthur is seeing his son again; Arthur is in the hospital; Arthur has legally married Briana Maguire.”
The phone rang. Travis answered it, then looked over at me. “It’s Mr. Brennan. He wants to give you directions to his house in Lake Arrowhead.”
30
We were on the Riverside Freeway, stuck in traffic, when the fight started. It began with what was supposed to be a compliment.
“I have to admit,” Travis said, “I’ve been surprised by the Kellys.”
“Finding out we aren’t such a bad bunch after all?” I said, trying to keep my tone light, but in retrospect, I’ll admit I failed to do so.
“I’m not ready to forgive Patrick, of course,” he said.
“Oh, of course not!”
He didn’t miss it that time. “Look, I’m sorry, but you weren’t living in Las Piernas when all hell broke loose for us. Your father completely turned his back on us.”
“Travis, that back had been turned on your family for years. I don’t say it was right—it obviously grew out of a terrible misunderstanding. But have you ever thought that your father could have explained what was going on?”
“Oh, right! He’s going to tell Patrick Kelly, who has scowled at him from the moment he met him, that he can’t read!”
“I’m not saying that what my father did was wonderful. But how hard did anybody on your side of the family work to patch things up?”
“Because he was known to be so forgiving? Look—forget about how he felt about my father. Do you realize how hard life was for my mother, after she split up with my dad?”
“Did she try to make contact with my father?”
“Did Patrick try to contact her?” he shot back.
I tried to count to ten. I got to three, and said, “A moment ago you said I didn’t know what was going on in Las Piernas then. You were only eleven. You didn’t know what was going on in my father’s life then, did you?”
“How could I? He wasn’t speaking to us. Besides, it couldn’t have been as bad as what was happening to her.”
“Oh, no? Well, listen to this, Your Honor, Judge of the Family. He had cancer. How’s that for an excuse?”
“He didn’t tell us,” he said, but he wasn’t shouting now.
“No, he was sort of like your own father. He had his secrets, too. He didn’t like to appear to be weak. He was the one who had to be strong for everybody else. He didn’t let me know about it until he was too sick to work. So I came down from Bakersfield and took care of him.”
“But Barbara—”
“Barbara couldn’t take it. She still hasn’t forgiven him for knowing that, for calling me to come to him. Then again, she hasn’t forgiven herself for running away from his illness.”
There was a long silence.
“Go ahead,” he said. “Ask.”
“Ask what?”
“Ask me why I was out riding around in a purple-and-yellow camper—”
“Oh, Christ—”
“—telling children’s stories—”
“That’s not what I was trying to say!” I protested.
“Telling fairy tales, while my parents were dying.”
“You didn’t know that!”
“I didn’t know what would happen to my mother.” He paused, swallowed hard. “But I knew my dad was dying.”
“Travis—no, please. I wasn’t trying to say anything like that.”
“Let me—let me explain.” He couldn’t go on for a moment, but gradually he pulled himself together and said, “I think I’ve told you that I reached a point in my life when I wanted to get to know my father—as an adult. My mother didn’t like the idea. I don’t think, looking back on it, that it was because she hated him then. Even during the worst of it, I think she still loved him. I guess I’ve always known that.
“But I don’t think she was ever a person who found it easy to trust others. She had trusted him, though, and he destroyed that trust. After that, she wouldn’t date other men. The one man she loved had caught her up in a thousand lies, and her son was a bastard whose face was a constant reminder of the man who destroyed her life—” Travis—
“No, she said that to me once. ”Every time I look at you, do you know who I see?“”
“She didn’t mean it—”
“Yes, she did. I’ll admit she was angry, but she meant it. It wasn’t so obvious when I was younger, with a boy’s face, but as I became a man, I was a reminder.” He paused, and added, “I’m not saying she didn’t love me. She did. I never doubted that.
“But you can see why,” he went on, “the closer my father and I became, the more upset she became. She started issuing ultimatums to me. You haven’t known me very long, but I guess you can im
agine how well that worked.”
I smiled. “Yes, I think so.”
“My father had already been diagnosed with cancer when I started to spend more time with him, but he wasn’t—he wasn’t an invalid. Most of the time, he did his best to make me forget that he was ill. We had a lot of catching up to do. It was clear to me that he still loved my mother. It was the way he would ask about her, the way he would look whenever he’d talk about the years when we were a family.”